Publication | Open Access
Structure‐affinity insights into the Na<sup>+</sup> and Ca<sup>2+</sup> interactions with multiple sites of a sodium‐calcium exchanger
12
Citations
33
References
2020
Year
Selective recognition and transport of Na<sup>+</sup> and Ca<sup>2+</sup> ions by sodium-calcium exchanger (NCX) proteins is a primary prerequisite for Ca<sup>2+</sup> signaling and homeostasis. Twelve ion-coordinating residues are highly conserved among NCXs, and distinct NCX orthologs contain two or three carboxylates, while sharing a common ion-exchange stoichiometry (3Na<sup>+</sup> :1Ca<sup>2+</sup> ). How these structural differences affect the ion-binding affinity, selectivity, and transport rates remains unclear. Here, the mutational effects of three carboxylates (E54, E213, and D240) were analyzed on the ion-exchange rates in the archaeal NCX from Methanococcus jannaschii and ion-induced structure-affinity changes were monitored by attenuated total reflection-Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (ATR-FTIR). The D240N mutation elevated the ion-transport rates by twofold to threefold, meaning that the deprotonation of D240 is not essential for transport catalysis. In contrast, mutating E54 or E213 to A, D, N, or Q dramatically decreased the ion-transport rates. ATR-FTIR revealed high- and low-affinity binding of Na<sup>+</sup> or Ca<sup>2+</sup> with E54 and E213, but not with D240. These findings reveal distinct structure-affinity states at specific ion-binding sites in the inward-facing (IF) and outward-facing orientation. Collectively, two multidentate carboxylate counterparts (E54 and E213) play a critical role in determining the ion coordination/transport in prokaryotic and eukaryotic NCXs, whereas the ortholog substitutions in prokaryotes (aspartate) and eukaryotes (asparagine) at the 240 position affect the ion-transport rates differently (k<sub>cat</sub> ), probably due to the structural differences in the transition state.
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